Gary Dessler
tenth edition
Chapter 9
Part 3 Training and Development
Performance Management
and Appraisal
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc.
All rights reserved.
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook
The University of West Alabama
After studying this chapter,
you should be able to:
1. Describe the appraisal process.
2. Develop, evaluate, and administer at least four
performance appraisal tools.
3. Explain and illustrate the problems to avoid in
appraising performance.
4.
List and discuss the pros and cons of six appraisal
methods.
5. Perform an effective appraisal interview.
6. Discuss the pros and cons of using different raters
to appraise a person’s performance.
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved.
9–2
Comparing Performance Appraisal and
Performance Management
 Performance appraisal
– Evaluating an employee’s current and/or past
performance relative to his or her performance
standards.
 Performance management
– The process employers use to make sure
employees are working toward organizational
goals.
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9–3
Why Performance Management?
 Increasing use by employers of performance
management reflects:
– The popularity of the total quality management
(TQM) concepts.
– The belief that traditional performance appraisals
are often not just useless but counterproductive.
– The necessity in today’s globally competitive
industrial environment for every employee’s efforts
to focus on helping the company to achieve its
strategic goals.
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9–4
An Introduction to Appraising
Performance
 Why appraise performance?
– Appraisals play an integral role in the employer’s
performance management process.
– Appraisals help in planning for correcting
deficiencies and reinforce things done correctly.
– Appraisals, in identifying employee strengths and
weaknesses, are useful for career planning
– Appraisals affect the employer’s salary raise
decisions.
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9–5
Classroom
Teaching
Appraisal By
Students
Source: Richard I. Miller, Evaluating Faculty
for Promotional and Tenure (San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1987), pp. 164–165.
Copyright © 1987, Jossey-Bass Inc.,
Publishers. All rights reserved. Reprinted with
permission.
Figure 9–1
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9–6
Realistic Appraisals
 Motivations for soft (less-than-candid)
appraisals
– The fear of having to hire and train someone new
– The unpleasant reaction of the appraisee
– A company appraisal process that’s not conducive
to candor
 Hazards of giving soft appraisals
– Employee loses the chance to improve before
being forced to change jobs.
– Lawsuits arising from dismissals involving
inaccurate performance appraisals.
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9–7
Continuous improvement
 A management philosophy that requires
employers to continuously set and
relentlessly meet ever-higher quality, cost,
delivery, and availability goals by:
– Eradicating the seven wastes:
• overproduction, defective products, and unnecessary
downtime, transportation, processing costs, motion, and
inventory.
– Requiring each employee to continuously improve
his or her own personal performance, from one
appraisal period to the next.
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9–8
The Components of an Effective
Performance Management Process
 Direction sharing
 Role clarification
 Goal alignment
 Developmental goal setting
 Ongoing performance monitoring
 Ongoing feedback
 Coaching and support
 Performance assessment (appraisal)
 Rewards, recognition, and compensation
 Workflow and process control and return
Figure 9–2
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9–9
Defining Goals and Work Efforts
 Guidelines for effective goals
–
–
–
–
Assign specific goals
Assign measurable goals
Assign challenging but doable goals
Encourage participation
 SMART goals are:
–
–
–
–
–
Specific, and clearly state the desired results.
Measurable in answering “how much.”
Attainable, and not too tough or too easy.
Relevant to what’s to be achieved.
Timely in reflecting deadlines and milestones.
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9–10
Performance Appraisal Roles
 Supervisors
– Usually do the actual appraising.
– Must be familiar with basic appraisal techniques.
– Must understand and avoid problems that can
cripple appraisals.
– Must know how to conduct appraisals fairly.
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9–11
Performance Appraisal Roles (cont’d)
 HR department
– Serves a policy-making and advisory role.
– Provides advice and assistance regarding the
appraisal tool to use.
– Prepares forms and procedures and insists that all
departments use them.
– Responsible for training supervisors to improve
their appraisal skills.
– Responsible for monitoring the system to ensure
that appraisal formats and criteria comply with
EEO laws and are up to date.
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9–12
Steps in Appraising Performance
 Defining the job
– Making sure that you and your subordinate agree
on his or her duties and job standards.
 Appraising performance
– Comparing your subordinate’s actual performance
to the standards that have been set; this usually
involves some type of rating form.
 Providing feedback
– Discussing the subordinate’s performance and
progress, and making plans for any development
required.
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved.
9–13
Designing the Appraisal Tool
 What to measure?
– Work output (quality and quantity)
– Personal competencies
– Goal (objective) achievement
 How to measure?
– Graphic rating scales
– Alternation ranking method
– MBO
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9–14
Performance Appraisal Methods
 Graphic rating scale
– A scale that lists a number of traits and a range of
performance for each that is used to identify the
score that best describes an employee’s level of
performance for each trait.
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9–15
Graphic
Rating Scale
with Space
for
Comments
Figure 9–3
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9–16
Portion of an Administrative Secretary’s Sample
Performance Appraisal Form
Source: James Buford Jr., Bettye Burkhalter, and Grover Jacobs, “Link Job Description
to Performance Appraisals,” Personnel Journal, June 1988, pp. 135–136.
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 9–4
9–17
Performance
Management Outline
Source: www.cwru.edu.
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 9–5a
9–18
Performance
Management
Outline
(cont’d)
Source: www.cwru.edu.
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 9–5b
9–19
Performance
Management
Outline
(cont’d)
Source: www.cwru.edu.
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 9–5c
9–20
Performance Appraisal Methods (cont’d)
 Alternation ranking method
– Ranking employees from best to worst on a
particular trait, choosing highest, then lowest,
until all are ranked.
 Paired comparison method
– Ranking employees by making a chart of all
possible pairs of the employees for each trait and
indicating which is the better employee of the pair.
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9–21
Alternation Ranking Scale
Figure 9–6
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9–22
Ranking Employees by the
Paired Comparison Method
Note: + means “better than.” − means “worse than.” For each chart, add up
the number of 1’s in each column to get the highest-ranked employee.
Figure 9–7
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9–23
Performance Appraisal Methods (cont’d)
 Forced distribution method
– Similar to grading on a curve; predetermined
percentages of ratees are placed in various
performance categories.
– Example:
•
•
•
•
•
15% high performers
20% high-average performers
30% average performers
20% low-average performers
15% low performers
 Narrative Forms
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9–24
Performance Appraisal Methods (cont’d)
 Behaviorally anchored rating scale (BARS)
– An appraisal method that uses quantified scale
with specific narrative examples of good and poor
performance.
 Developing a BARS:
–
–
–
–
–
Generate critical incidents
Develop performance dimensions
Reallocate incidents
Scale the incidents
Develop a final instrument
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9–25
Performance Appraisal Methods (cont’d)
 Advantages of using a BARS
–
–
–
–
–
A more accurate gauge
Clearer standards
Feedback
Independent dimensions
Consistency
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved.
9–26
AppraisalCoaching
Worksheet
Source: Reprinted with permission of
the publisher, HRnext.com; copyright
HRnext.com, 2003.
Figure 9–8
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved.
9–27
Examples of Critical Incidents for
an Assistant Plant Manager
Table 9–1
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9–28
Example of a
Behaviorally
Anchored Rating
Scale for the
Dimension
Salesmanship Skill
Source:Walter C. Borman, “Behavior
Based Rating,” in Ronald A. Berk (ed.),
Performance Assessment: Methods and
Applications (Baltimore, MD: Johns
Hopkins University Press, 1986), p. 103.
Figure 9–9
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9–29
Management by Objectives (MBO)
 Involves setting specific measurable goals
with each employee and then periodically
reviewing the progress made.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Set the organization’s goals.
Set departmental goals.
Discuss departmental goals.
Define expected results (set individual goals).
Performance reviews.
Provide feedback.
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved.
9–30
Computerized and Web-Based
Performance Appraisal
 Performance appraisal software programs
– Keep notes on subordinates during the year.
– Electronically rate employees on a series of
performance traits.
– Generate written text to support each part of the
appraisal.
 Electronic performance monitoring (EPM)
– Having supervisors electronically monitor the
amount of computerized data an employee is
processing per day, and thereby his or her
performance.
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved.
9–31
Potential Rating Scale Appraisal Problems
 Unclear standards
– An appraisal that is too open to interpretation.
 Halo effect
– Occurs when a supervisor’s rating of a subordinate
on one trait biases the rating of that person on
other traits.
 Central tendency
– A tendency to rate all employees the same way,
such as rating them all average.
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9–32
A Graphic Rating Scale with Unclear Standards
Note: For example, what exactly is meant by
“good,” “quantity of work,” and so forth?
Table 9–2
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9–33
Potential Rating Scale Appraisal Problems
(cont’d)
 Strictness/leniency
– The problem that occurs when a supervisor has a
tendency to rate all subordinates either high or
low.
 Bias
– The tendency to allow individual differences such
as age, race, and sex to affect the appraisal
ratings employees receive.
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9–34
How to Avoid Appraisal Problems
 Learn and understand the potential problems,
and the solutions for each.
 Use the right appraisal tool. Each tool has its
own pros and cons.
 Train supervisors to reduce rating errors such
as halo, leniency, and central tendency.
 Have raters compile positive and negative
critical incidents as they occur.
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9–35
Who Should Do the Appraising?
 The immediate supervisor
 Peers
 Rating committees
 Self-ratings
 Subordinates
 360-Degree feedback
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9–36
Advantages and Disadvantages of Appraisal Tools
Table 9–3
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9–37
The Appraisal Interview
 Types of appraisal interviews
– Satisfactory—Promotable
– Satisfactory—Not promotable
– Unsatisfactory—Correctable
– Unsatisfactory—Uncorrectable
 How to conduct the appraisal interview
– Talk in terms of objective work data.
– Don’t get personal.
– Encourage the person to talk.
– Don’t tiptoe around.
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9–38
Performance
Contract
Source: David Antonion, “Improving the
Performance Management Process Before
Discontinuing Performance Appraisals,”
Compensation and Benefits Review May–
June 1994, p. 33, 34.
Figure 9–10
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9–39
Checklist
During the
Appraisal
Interview
Source: Reprinted with permission of
the publisher, HRnext.com. Copyright
HRnext.com, 2003.
Figure 9–11
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9–40
The Appraisal Interview (cont’d)
 How to handle a defensive subordinate
–
–
–
–
Recognize that defensive behavior is normal.
Never attack a person’s defenses.
Postpone action.
Recognize your own limitations.
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9–41
The Appraisal Interview (cont’d)
 How to criticize a subordinate
– Do it in a manner that lets the person maintain his
or her dignity and sense of worth.
– Criticize in private, and do it constructively.
– Avoid once-a-year “critical broadsides” by giving
feedback on a daily basis, so that the formal
review contains no surprises.
– Never say the person is “always” wrong
– Criticism should be objective and free of any
personal biases on your part.
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9–42
The Appraisal Interview (cont’d)
 How to ensure the interview leads to
improved performance
– Don’t make the subordinate feel threatened during
the interview.
– Give the subordinate the opportunity to present
his or her ideas and feelings and to influence the
course of the interview.
– Have a helpful and constructive supervisor
conduct the interview.
– Offer the subordinate the necessary support for
development and change.
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9–43
The Appraisal Interview (cont’d)
 How to handle a formal written warning
– Purposes of the written warning
• To shake your employee out of bad habits.
• Help you defend your rating, both to your own boss and
(if needed) to the courts.
– Written warnings should:
• Identify standards by which employee is judged.
• Make clear that employee was aware of the standard.
• Specify deficiencies relative to the standard.
• Indicates employee’s prior opportunity for correction.
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9–44
Creating the Total Performance
Management Process
 “What is our strategy and what are our
goals?”
 “What does this mean for the goals we set for
our employees, and for how we train,
appraise, promote, and reward them?”
 What will be the technological support
requirements?
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9–45
Information Required for TRW’s Web-Based
Performance Management System
Source: D. Bradford Neary,“Creating a Company-Wide, Online, Performance Management System:
A Case Study at TRW, Inc.,” Human Resource Management 41, no 4 (Winter 2002), p. 495.
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 9–12
9–46
HR Scorecard
for Hotel Paris
International
Corporation*
Note: *(An abbreviated example showing selected
HR practices and outcomes aimed at implementing
the competitive strategy, “To use superior guest
services to differentiate the Hotel Paris properties
and thus increase the length of stays and the return
rate of guests and thus boost revenues and
profitability”)
Figure –13
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9–47
Key Terms
performance appraisal
performance management
graphic rating scale
alternation ranking method
paired comparison method
forced distribution method
critical incident method
behaviorally anchored rating
scale (BARS)
management by objectives
(MBO)
electronic performance
monitoring (EPM)
unclear standards
halo effect
central tendency
strictness/leniency
bias
appraisal interview
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved.
9–48